Is Jesus Coming Back Last Week?

Last week, a site called eBible Fellowship declared that May 21, 2015, had been Judgment Day, and anticipated that the world would end on Oct. 7, 2015. Just last month, due in part to the tetrad of lunar eclipses this year, many folks predicted (building on the writings of John Hagee and Jonathan Cahn) that the world would end on Sept. 23. Yet, these self-proclaimed prophets are not discouraged or dissuaded: Cahn, asked why no calamity had befallen the U.S. as he had predicted, told Pat Robertson on The 700 Club that the disaster could come anytime between now and next September.

If you Google “Is Jesus coming back?” there are more than 57 million results with headlines covering “When is Jesus returning?” “Is Jesus coming back sooner than you think?” “10 signs that Jesus is coming back soon,” and “The Date Jesus Will Return is Finally Revealed!”

We have, it seems, an insatiable appetite for this particular way of misreading Scripture. But the problem with these failed predictions is not simply that they have misinterpreted the Bible’s predictive prophecies—implying that sooner or later someone will get it right. The deeper problem with this way of reading Scripture, and indeed with anyone who claims to find a future history in the Bible, is that the Bible does not present a future history. At all. Period.

When prophets talk about the future, they do so to influence their present—to call their people to repentance by declaring where they are headed if they do not change course. For example, Jeremiah predicted that Jerusalem would fall to Babylon, but he also delivered to his people God’s challenge: “if you do not oppress the alien, the orphan, and the widow, or shed innocent blood in this place, and if you do not go after other gods to your own hurt, then I will dwell with you in this place, in the land that I gave of old to your ancestors forever and ever” (Jer 7:6-7, NRSV). Although their present course would lead them into exile and destruction, the possibility of a different future lay before them, if they could only claim it (although Jeremiah doubted that they could or would do so; see Jer 13:23). Rather than presenting an infallible vision of a fixed and unchangeable future, Jeremiah’s predictions were conditional, depending upon whether Jerusalem repented, or not.

The difference between the prophets of the Bible and modern charlatans who confidently claim to see the future is a difference not of degree, but of kind. It is not that the prophets of Israel were better fortune-tellers, but rather, that they were not fortune-tellers at all. The prophets were the obedient messengers of God, faithfully passing on to us what God had shown to them.

Indeed, it is not at all difficult to find unfulfilled prophecies in Scripture. The most famous example is Jonah 3:4, where the prophet (after a fishy detour!) at last arrives at Nineveh to deliver the message the Lord has given him: “Just forty days more and Nineveh will be overthrown!” (CEB). But it does not happen. The people of Nineveh repent in sackcloth, and God changes God’s mind (Jon 3:10). This is deeply disturbing to Jonah, but not surprising. Jonah had not wanted to deliver God’s message of judgment against Nineveh because he knew that God was likely not to follow through—that God would show mercy, leaving Jonah with the stamp of the false prophet whose predictions had not come true (Jon 4:2). Of course, that was exactly what had happened. No wonder Jonah is so angry!

Consider as well the many predictions in the New Testament that the end of the world would come soon (for example, Mk 13:30; 1 Cor 7:29-31; Rev 22:12, 20), which, taking them at face value, clearly did not come true, either. Within the New Testament itself, this delay is seen as a sign of God’s grace: “The Lord isn’t slow to keep his promise, as some think of slowness, but he is patient toward you, not wanting anyone to perish but all to change their hearts and lives” (2 Pet 3:9, CEB).

It is finally Jesus himself who puts to rest the pretense that, if we are only clever enough, we can read our future in the pages of Scripture: “But nobody knows when that day or hour will come, not the angels in heaven and not the Son. Only the Father knows” (Mk 13:32, CEB). If Jesus does not know, then certainly we do not, and cannot, know. The Bible is not tomorrow’s newspaper. It is word of God for the people of God, yesterday, today, and forever.

The Rev. Dr. Steve Tuell serves as the James A. Kelso Professor of Hebrew and Old Testament at Pittsburgh Theological Seminary. He regularly blogs at The Bible Guy and tweets at @Tuellbibleguy.

Comment ( 1 )

This is an interesting perspective from the standpoint that we should live our present lives in a state of expectancy and repentance. True, God is long suffering and patient, not willing that any should perish but all should come to repentance. The bible presents the coming of Christ in relatively short terms as though the event were to happen soon. Over and over again the nearness of Jesus’ second coming is emphasized as being close, “Behold I come quickly and my reward is with me.” However, I must disagree with one of your statements, “the Bible does not present a future history. At all. Period.”. The Bible is prophetic in many instances and that includes future history. The book of Daniel aptly points out the kingdoms of the world, and at that time when Daniel received the vision of the golden statue, they were in the beginning stages (Babylon). Daniel was given a panorama of earth’s history and the kingdoms that would follow in succession. In the book of Revelation, we have a plethora of events mentioned that pointed out future events such as the succession of kingdoms, the spiritual condition of the church, the mark of the beast, the rise of the anti-Christ and the seal of God. Some of these events have already happened and some have yet to happen. The book of Daniel and Revelation are two tandem books that reveal a large part of world/religious history and have 100% success rate in the predictions. We have a God that loves us so much, He gives us prophetic insight into the past and the future. Remember Jesus’ words in how He predicted the fall of Jerusalem and likewise pointed out the end of the world in His dual prophesy? See Mathew 24. I hope you will re-evaluate the conclusive statement you made about prophesy and future events because it simply isn’t true. Thank you for listening.